Sainik Welfare News, Uncategorized

खुशखबरी – 8वें वेतन आयोग से APPOINTMENT मिलना शुरू…

A fresh official development has given the 8th Central Pay Commission process a more active shape. The latest notice shows that the Commission is now moving beyond broad announcements and online submissions, and is beginning direct interaction with stakeholders on the ground. According to the official notice issued by the Eighth Central Pay Commission, a team of the Commission will visit Dehradun, Uttarakhand on 24 April 2026.

What makes this update important is that interested stakeholders can now seek an appointment to interact with the Commission during that visit. The notice clearly says that Central Government organisations, institutions, and unions or associations that want to meet the Commission in Dehradun must send their request by email to manish.kr1975@nic.in on or before 10 April 2026. The same notice also states that the venue details and meeting schedule will be shared later.

In simple terms, this is a meaningful administrative step. It suggests that the 8th CPC is not limited to collecting written inputs through its website, but is also preparing for direct consultations with organised stakeholders. That matters because pay revision discussions usually gain real momentum only when the process starts moving into meetings, representations, and structured interaction with employee and pensioner bodies. This reading is based on the Commission’s latest visit notice along with the official 8CPC website calendar, which already lists meetings with associations and unions in Delhi and in States or UTs, as well as State or UT visits.

This update should also be seen together with the Commission’s earlier public notice on memorandums and representations. In that notice, the 8th CPC invited submissions from associations, unions of serving employees and pensioners, organisations, institutions, and individuals through the official online format available on 8cpc.gov.in or the MyGov portal. It also made an important procedural point: hard copies, physical copies, emails, and PDFs of memorandums may not be considered by the Commission. The last date for such online submissions has been fixed as 30 April 2026.

So, at this stage, two parallel tracks are visible. One is the formal online route for submitting demands, suggestions, and representations before 30 April 2026. The second is the beginning of physical interaction through appointment-based meetings, starting with the Commission’s Dehradun visit scheduled for 24 April 2026. Taken together, these steps show that the consultation phase of the 8th Pay Commission is becoming more structured and more active.

For central government employees, pensioners, and their representative bodies, this is the part of the process that deserves close attention. The big salary and pension decisions are still some distance away, but the stage at which stakeholders can formally place their issues is clearly opening up. In practical terms, those who want their concerns to be heard now have both an online submission window and, in some cases, an opportunity to seek a direct appointment with the Commission’s visiting team.

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